Millennium Post (Kolkata)

Growth in India is expected to slow to 6.3% in FY2023: WB

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WASHINGTON: Growth in India is expected to slow to 6.3 per cent in FY 2023/24 (AprilMarch), a 0.3 percentage point downward revision from January, the World Bank said Tuesday but noted there is an unexpected resilience in private consumptio­n and investment and robust growth in the services.

The World Bank made these points in its latest edition of Global Economic Prospects according to which global growth is projected to decelerate from 3.1 per cent in 2022 to 2.1 per cent in 2023.

In Emerging Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs) other than China, growth is set to slow to 2.9 per cent this year from 4.1 per cent last year. These forecasts reflect broad-based downgrades.

“Growth in India is expected to slow further to 6.3 per cent in FY 2023/24 (April-March), a 0.3 percentage point downward revision from January,” the World Bank said.

“The surest way to reduce poverty and spread prosperity is through employment and slower growth makes job creation a lot harder,” said Ajay Banga, the newly-appointed World Bank Group President.

“It's important to keep in mind that growth forecasts are not destiny. We have an opportunit­y to turn the tide but it will take us all working together,” he said. Indian-origin Banga took over as the President of the World Bank on Friday.

In its report, the World Bank attributed the slowdown in India's growth to private consumptio­n being constraine­d by high inflation and rising borrowing costs, while government

In Emerging Markets and Developing Economies (EMDEs) other than China, growth is set to slow to 2.9 per cent this year from 4.1 per cent last year

consumptio­n is impacted by fiscal consolidat­ion.

“Growth is projected to pick up slightly through FY 2025/26 as inflation moves back toward the midpoint of the tolerance range and reforms payoff. India will remain the fastest-growing economy (in terms of both aggregate and per capita GDP) of the largest EMDEs,” it said.

In India, which accounts for three-quarters of output in South Asia, growth in early 2023 remained below what it achieved in the decade before the pandemic as higher prices and rising borrowing costs weighed on private consumptio­n.

However, manufactur­ing rebounded into 2023 after contractin­g in the second half of 2022, and investment growth remained buoyant as the government ramped up capital expenditur­e. Private investment was also likely boosted by increasing corporate profits, it said.

Unemployme­nt, it said, declined to 6.8 per cent in the first quarter of 2023, the lowest since the onset of the COVID19 pandemic, and labour force participat­ion increased. India's headline consumer price inflation has returned to within the central bank's 2-6 per cent tolerance band, it said.

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